Table of Contents
- The First Twenty Minutes
- Reading the Room
- Themed Nights and Dress Codes
- Amsterdam and Lisbon
- Frequently Asked Questions
A towel. That is the honest, complete answer to what to wear to a gay sauna. A towel and a pair of flip-flops, and ideally nothing else you would mind getting damp. Everything after this is about what “what to wear” is usually really asking.
Because it is almost never actually about the clothing. It is asking: what is expected of me, what will make me less conspicuous as someone new, and how do I walk into a room full of men in towels without looking like someone who has never done this before. Those are different questions and they deserve different answers.
Before you even get there: wear something easy to take off. Not because anyone is going to see you arrive, but because undressing at speed in a locker room when you are slightly nervous is not the moment for a complicated outfit. Slip-on shoes. Simple layers. I showed up to Sauna Nieuwezijds in Amsterdam one February in a coat with four different fastenings and I still think about it. The less friction between you and your locker, the better the first ten minutes feel.
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The First Twenty Minutes
The first time you walk into a gay sauna there is a specific kind of disorientation that nobody thinks to warn you about. Not fear, not excitement exactly, more like standing in a room where everyone else has been speaking a language you have only ever read. What helps: do not try to do anything for the first twenty minutes. Pay at the door. Get your towel and locker key. Find your locker. Shower, because every sauna requires it before you enter any wet or steam area. Then do the orientation lap.
Walk the whole building once before you do anything else. Where is the steam room? The dry sauna? The dark room if there is one? The jacuzzi, the rest area, the lounge? You are learning the floor plan, not cruising. Once you know where everything is, you stop looking lost, and looking like you know where you are going reads very differently in these spaces than looking like you are searching for something. Also: not everyone in the sauna is actively looking for a hookup at every moment. Some men are there for the steam and the quiet. Reading who is doing what is part of learning the room.

Reading the Room
The consent system in gay saunas is non-verbal and almost entirely silent. Eye contact held is the first signal. If someone makes eye contact and holds your gaze when you pass in a corridor or steam room, that is an invitation to slow down. If they look away and keep moving, that is not an invitation to follow. Lying on a bench with your towel loose or open is a more explicit signal of availability. Moving toward someone in a dark room who does not move toward you in return is too much, too fast. The signals are fine-grained once you are paying attention. Ending HIV Australia has a practical breakdown of consent in these spaces if you want a second reference point alongside this one.
Saying no is also part of the language and just as important. A small shake of the head. Pulling your towel closed. Moving away without explanation. You do not owe anyone a reason and they do not owe you one either. The best saunas in Amsterdam and Lisbon both operate on an unspoken agreement that no means no, immediately and without discussion. That agreement is what makes the whole thing work. The GGD Amsterdam formally documents gay sauna venues as part of the city’s sexual health infrastructure, which is partly why Amsterdam’s scene carries as much ease as it does.
Themed Nights and Dress Codes
Most gay saunas run themed nights, and this is the one moment when what to wear gets more specific. A regular weeknight at a sauna in Amsterdam or Lisbon: your towel is fine, full stop. A fetish night, a bear night, a rubber night: the dress code changes and at the better venues it is enforced at the door. A jockstrap is almost always acceptable on a themed night if you are uncertain. A harness is welcome at most fetish-coded events. If the night is specifically rubber or leather, arriving in a plain towel is going to feel immediately wrong in a way you will understand. Check the venue’s Instagram before you go. This is not gatekeeping, it is how the venue communicates what kind of night it is building. On a regular night you do not need gear. Showing up in a harness to a standard Thursday is fine but also slightly over-dressed for the energy, in the way arriving in a tuxedo to a dinner party is. You can, nobody will say anything, but the room will notice.
What to Expect at Gay Saunas in Amsterdam and Lisbon
The two sauna cultures I know best operate quite differently. Amsterdam runs on Dutch matter-of-factness: you pay, you get a towel, you are expected to understand roughly how it works. The crowd at Sauna Nieuwezijds is genuinely mixed in age and body type, and the whole atmosphere is built around efficiency and discretion rather than performance. For the full breakdown of what each Amsterdam venue offers by floor, crowd, and night, the Amsterdam gay saunas guide covers it properly.
Lisbon’s cruising venues, particularly the ones covered in the Lisbon gay saunas and cruising guide, have a warmer social atmosphere. More lingering in common areas, more conversation in rest spaces, slightly less anonymous in feel. The city’s gay culture is less transactional than Amsterdam’s by default, and the sauna culture reflects that. If you are thinking about outdoor cruising as context for what a sauna offers differently, the Vondelpark cruising guide explains the outdoor version of the same dynamic. And if you are thinking about physical preparation for sex at a sauna, a full guide to bottoming preparation is coming.
The sauna does not require you to participate in anything you do not want to. You can go for the steam room and the heat and leave without speaking to anyone, and that is a legitimate reason to be there. A towel. Flip-flops. An understanding of how the room works. That is still the complete answer.

